Beast Hunters- Part One Read online




  Beast Hunters

  Part One

  By

  Tom Harem

  Beast Hunters Book 1 © 2019 by Tom Harem. All Rights Reserved.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the author. The only exception is by a reviewer, who may quote short excerpts in a review.

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Table Of Contents

  Preview

  Chapter I

  Chapter II

  Chapter III

  Chapter IV

  Chapter V

  Chapter VI

  Chapter VII

  Preview

  He closed his teeth, gnashing, and turned his face, grabbing Kendra's whip and using it to pull us toward him and to throw us across the air. Our bodies rolled down the road, our knees peeling and our hands scraping on the asphalt. Kendra's body fell on mine, my hands on her hips and her hair in my face. The sun overshadowed her face and her green eyes took on amber contours, her warm breath brushing against my neck and one of her knees between my legs.

  "I... Ah... Get off me!" Kendra said, tripping over her own words.

  "You have to get up first!" I answered, looking to the side, seeing Maggie's fireballs losing color and shrinking in size, almost like mere clicks bursting in her hands.

  Kendra got up, straightened her clothes and grabbed her whip which was on the floor, the end covered in a brownish liquid with a smell that almost made her vomit. The policemen murmured among themselves, with their hands in the holsters, already doubting that we would be able to achieve victory. A mere level 2 monster, and we couldn't even defeat that.

  Chapter I

  I had been finally accepted as a Beast Hunter. After all those years training; the sleepless nights, the insults I had to endure from colleagues and teachers, I had done it. Three years in that sea of horrors and I was finally ready to save the world. Well, there were certain dangers but as my dad used to say, hunting monsters was funnier than having good health. I knew I would become one of the top10 Hunters in this part of the continent and, in my head, I could already hear people chanting my name. All I had to do was go to the Hunter’s main building - wait until I got my Hunter App and get a few cold coins. They were going to be useful for buying a new weapon, and maybe a few cool items.

  The worst part was having to be part of a group. Truth be told, I had never been much of a teamwork player, but if there was one thing the academy taught me is that not all monsters could be defeated without help.

  "EVERYONE TO THE RIGHT! THIS ROAD IS PROHIBITED. THE HUNTERS ARE SOLVING THE PROBLEM" a policeman in black uniform and a golden badge shouted, signaling people to drive to the closest street.

  A mixture of red and orange flashed before my eyes. The explosions were getting bigger and I could even see a huge dinosaur, with green scalps, and a metal arm, firing a Hunter across the air. It was hard to follow all the movements when there were people behind me honking constantly while others turned over to the second street and speeded up until the tires smoked the whole street. It wouldn't be the first time that a hunter's fight would take on epic proportions, and ended up unraveling amidst buildings, tearing them down and injuring people. Especially when the Hunters were still rookies. We had a habit of thinking we were better than we really were. I knew I couldn’t make that mistake. My job was to defeat the beasts and protect the people.

  Suddenly, an iron sound dragging through the floor crept in, leaving everyone's ears humming. One of the most prolific hunters of the decade had climbed on his electric skateboard and had jumped over the police barrier.

  I wasn’t a big fan of him, much less his red spiky hair. He thought he was better than all of us. I still remembered when in an interview, after destroying a level 9 monster, he challenged any Hunter to overcome him in combat. He was one of the few who always fought alone and despite the help he gave the police, they avoided having to contact him. He was a 27-year-old man whose father had trained him to be a Hunter since he was born, but in his head was still a teenager. He had never developed. Still, he didn’t lack money, women or fame. Everything that I desired. I could see him, withdrawing his semi-automatic gun, the sun beating down on it, dazzling me and those close to me.

  "I'M ALREADY LATE!" a man in his 40's, two cars behind me, screamed.

  He was right. Arriving late was not a good first start. The line advanced and I drove away while looking at the battle happening meters away from me.

  The sound of the glass shattering from afar made me company all the way – it fell on the ground and someone had stepped on it. That would most likely lead to another anti careless Hunters demonstration. It had been happening a lot lately. People have had enough of the carefree attitudes and were starting to turn on us.

  I hadn’t set foot in the capital in a while. I was never one to enjoy the frantic people, the soles of their shoes echoing as they tapped the ground, and the constant colorful digital billboards advertising Hunters’ news – one informing of Foxel’s latest victory, the red-haired boy, while the other announced that there were less than 24 hours left before a new batch of long-range weapons were put on sale. The minimum cost of one was 2500 Hunter Points. Nice, I had zero.

  I needed to hurry up. I had to go get the Hunter app and kill some monsters to get points, which could also be used as real money. No wonder the population saw us as outsiders instead of vigilantes in plain sight. We not only got a salary at the end of the month, but we could also use our points to buy things. It was like we were getting double-paid.

  The streets were almost empty at the time. Most people parked the cars in the general parking lot before going to the restaurants. Unlike them, I drove for a few more minutes until I saw the big yellow-brown building that rose in splendor above most of the others, being nicknamed the city’s biggest attraction.

  I didn’t even leave the car. I loved the hotdogs scent that danced throughout the air, coming to me from the walking ban down the street. The building had five huge floors and each of one was the base of the Hunters of that level. The red doors were never closed for more than a few seconds. There were people coming and going all the time, but they ignored and avoided touching each other.

  Despite the three years I had spent in the academy, since I was 18 until now, the distance between Hunters who didn’t belong in the same group still confused me. Maybe because of my uprising – full house every weekend and all the neighbors sharing funny stories during the barbecue. Even today, the chop smell still takes me to that tender age where everything seemed simple. But, anyway, I was already wasting too much time. After closing my car’s door, I moved on to the building’s gate. My heart was beating more than I would ever admit to anyone. Even my ears were going deaf and my knees trembled like sticks in an open field where the wind spun mercilessly. It was the second time I had entered there. The yellow walls and the newly painted black ceiling contrasted with the white marble floor. A large room where several groups talked to each other and, in the background, there were two escalator rollers. Before them, there was a desk where a girl with red hair up to her shoulders, green eyes shining under the light that brightened them, scratched her rosy cheeks.

  She pointed out the names of all those who passed by and their ranks. No one dared to disrespect her. Instead, everyone said good morning to her, even the most badly regarded. I walked to the line and waited until my turn came. I cleared my throat before
I spoke to her. I explained my situation to her, told her my name, and asked her where I had to go. She never took her eyes from me, numbed by my words, shaking her head slightly to the right while I poured everything out.

  "You need to go down those stairs. Second door on the left.” She said. A soft, embellished and almost therapeutic voice, "Welcome to the Hunters Headquarters, James!" She added, this time ending with a smile.

  The scent of jasmine rose through my nostrils. My body calmed down - my hairs dropped, my feet settled on the ground and all my nerves disappeared in seconds.

  "Thank you. I’m making sure I don't get lost around here." I answered her, trying to keep the conversation going even though I knew there were at least 10 people behind me in line.

  "If you get lost, just come back here. I'll help you," she said and leaned over to me, the cleavage not being enough to hide the boobs that landed on the table.

  I admit I was embarrassed to the point where my cheeks turned pink. I thanked her for her help, and she smiled once more, this time putting some loose strands of her hair behind her ear.

  I rolled up my sleeves and walked into the unknown. I wasn’t the best student at the academy, but I excelled at using long-range weapons – the teachers used to say I had a lynx’s eye. I went down the stairs, the white steps too small for my feet, and then I walked down the empty corridor. The light flashed in the room whose white floor contrasted with the high black ceiling. A lady in her 40’s, wide-hips and sloping shoulders, was on the back of the room, tidying up some dusty pages between reams of paper. She didn’t hear me coming in. She was humming a pop song, the kind you could hear on the radio every morning at 8 am and used her free hand to drum with her fingers in her brown pants – they looked like they were about to burst.

  I cleared my mouth until I got her attention. She turned to me and took her index finger to her thin lips. Still thoughtful, the soles of her shoes reverberated through the metal pipes that surrounded the large room. She smiled unabashedly, showing her yellow teeth and wrinkles twitching on the protruding line that went from her stuffy nose to her brown eyes, iris hidden behind her bushy eyebrows and eyelashes curved upwards. She leaned over the table and asked me how she could help me.

  She drunk with her fingers around the marble desk. She seemed to be looking for the right words until the sputum scratched the walls of her throat. She apologized, removed a white handkerchief from her pocket and passed it across her thin lips, putting it back in her pocket, this time in the upper corner of her red sweater.

  “Hello, my dear. You’re from the new batch of Hunters, right? I assume you’re here because you want your Hunter APP. I hope you know how careful you must be out there. A lot of people came here in search of money and fame and come back with less than they had.” She said, frowning and scratching her left nostril.

  “Yes, I am. After three years there I know damn well when I should be careful, but what do you mean by they return with less? Less money?” I asked, intrigued by the mystery that the woman carried with her.

  “Money is not everything, young man. They come back with grief on their minds – repentance consumes some. Others, happier or not, depending on how you see life, come back without body parts. Not forgetting those who don’t even come back. It’s not as easy as it looks out there.” She answered, her fresh cinnamon scent filling the room.

  “I’ll be careful,” I answered, omitting how anxious I was. How I felt my toes curling as an electric charge run down my spine.

  “Your choice. I just need to know what your type is. I’d say you’re not a huge fan of short-range fighting. Maybe a shooter?”

  “You have an eye for this sort of thing, don’t you?” I replied, trying hard not to laugh, “You’re right. I’m a shooter.”

  “Mmhhmmm.” She mumbled, “I have a few options here that I think you’ll appreciate. Long or short range?” She asked, the wheels in her head turning as she thought about the different types.

  “Short. Do you have something with a huge impact power but light enough to handle?” I asked her, reminding myself of the hard training I went through.

  “Of course, boy. We have everything. I’ll pick up something.” She replied.

  She smiled at me and turned around. Her fat, greasy fingers ran through the metal of the bookshelves as she walked. My heart was beating like 1000 men marching towards victory and apogee. She grabbed a few boxes, searched them, closing, and repeating the same accuracy of movements in others, and despite her big hips, she didn’t seem to have any difficulty in bending or kneeling.

  After a few seconds, she opened one of the boxes that were in a corner, looked at me, smiled and picked it up.

  She placed it on the table carefully and that was when I noticed the little yellow symbol in the left corner saying “fragile”. The blue and orange colors peered through a tiny opening. My toes curled up and my arm hair raised. She took an x-act from a drawer under the desk and opened the box until the smell spread across the room – a metallic, warm fragrance. I inhaled it, taking a deep breath, still incredulous with the three options that stood in front of me.

  A pistol with two pipes, one black, and one orange, with a black handle and the rest dark blue. It wasn’t heavy but not as light as I was looking for. I ignored the second option – a three-arrow bow. My knowledge about bows was zero. I’d used them a few times at the academy, but the arrows had a habit of ending up on top of a tree, forcing someone far more skilled to get them with sharp, precise shots.

  The third option seemed to be the most appropriate – similar to the first, but orange strokes under both gray pipes and had an appropriate weight. I was able to maneuver it with ease and even did some tricks with it. I moved my fingers between the handle, throwing the gun in the air, recovering it and turning it.

  The woman looked at me, her eyes following the glint, the orange obscuring the grayness.

  “I see you’ve already decided.” She said, putting the rest of the weapons away.

  “I think so. For a beginner like me, this is great.” I answered her, putting the gun on the table, “I’m excited.”

  “They always are, boy. You can have the gun now. Just sign here.” She said and bowed again.

  From another drawer, she took a tablet and asked for my fingerprint and a signature using a small rubber-tipped pencil. I followed her directions. I pressed the base of my index finger against the plate until the color changed and a laser analyzed the whole palm of my hand, scanning it and running my prints through the system. Letters began to appear, slowly, joining until they formed sentences, pointing out information about me.

  James Crusher

  Rank: E

  Experience points: 0/150 to the next Rank

  Money: 250 hunter points

  Weapon: Orange Pistol

  “Turn around now.” She ordered me.

  She raked through something in an already open drawer and used her free hand to divert the hair whirlpool on the back of my head. I was going to ask her what she was doing when I felt a needle penetrating my skin, going deep, pouring something into my blood. I blinked my eyes - the colors around me surfed the walls and a sharp pain seized the left side of my head.

  "I know it hurts, but it's normal. It'll only take a few seconds." She said while removing the needle from my skin. When she removed the needle, my elastic skin also receded, leaving the area all reddish, as she showed me in a mirror that she was carrying in her pocket.

  "It's done. You're ready to get out of here and fight the monsters that you want, level up and perhaps reach the top. Now you can see all the information about your colleagues. As you are still in rank E, you can only go up to the first floor, where it is the common space of your rank, and you can come down here, to me, to buy weapons and equipment. Any questions?"

  "I don't think so. Thank you very much! You'll see that in a short time I'll be climbing the ranking, reaching the top, and you'll be surprised, Miss...? I still don't know your name."

  "
You can call me Grace." She answered and smiled one last time before sighing and turning her back, dragging her suede shoes across the floor.

  Chapter II

  I went up the stairs again and found myself on ground zero. The same girl from before talked to a boy with long grey hair, brown eyes and a long black robe that covered his whole body, down to the boots which were also black, and that were a few centimeters away from the pavement.

  I disregarded the situation, which was normal, and went up to the first floor. It was the first time I had ever put my feet on that shining floor, the lights falling on the wide empty corridor, my body reflected in the ground’s clearness as my heart almost popped out of my body. I didn't need any fuss when the beating of my heartbeat was so loud. Someone had glued a white paper with a black arrow pointing to the left indicating that it was the route to the living room. There was no information about what was on the right side, although it was possible to see a wooden door in the corner.

  There were pictures of legendary Hunters all over the hallway - from the first one, Carlx, 30 years ago, to Laney, the first woman to be photographed, 25 years ago. Him with his legendary brown robe, black pants and two swords on his back, while she had her purple dress complimenting her short pink hair, and her gloves with long-range missiles.

  The door was half open. As I opened it, the door crept across the floor, drawing the attention of everyone present. They had their eyes on me, on the newbie, who had just arrived there and was already causing disturbances. As usual, they didn't seem very nice or receptive. A group that was using the interactive whiteboard to see new missions and two girls - one lying on the couch with a black top hat covering her face and a black bustier, one of those that the two parts are attached by metallic threads and another girl, sitting on a cushioned chair, with a light blue hat and a rose-colored dress, fully matching with her rosy cheeks and green eyes. She also had a metallic crystalline glove on one hand. I had never seen one like that before. Truth was, I didn't even know how they worked. Teachers, of course, used to explain everything about them to us, how they created a natural element out of cells that were discovered about 50 years ago and how they used body energy to do it, but otherwise I knew zero about how they worked.